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ARTWORK AT VASQUEZ ROCKS INTERPRETIVE CENTERNAMED ONE OF THE NATION’S 50 BEST NEW PUBLIC ART PROJECTS

The artwork titled “Orit Haj” by Didier Hess was chosen by “Americans for the Arts” from over 350 submissions across the country

AGUA DULCE – Orit Haj, artwork at the newly dedicated Vasquez Rocks Interpretive Center has been named as one of the 50 best public art projects by the 2013 Public Art Network Year in Review by Americans for the Arts, the nation’s leading nonprofit organization for advancing the arts.

Orit Haj is a tribute to the Native American culture of the Tatavium people from the Santa Clarita Valley. To construct Orit Haj, the artist team Didier Hess (a collaborative led by Jenna Didier and Oliver Hess) and community members used an architectural building material called rammed earth, which is a mixture of soil and cement compacted into forms to create a solid earthen structure.

Over the course of about 150 years, due to the artists’ creative modification in the rammed earth formula, personal artifacts embedded by the participants will be revealed as the material slowly erodes.

The annual “Year in Review” program recognizes the most exemplary, innovative, permanent or temporary public art works created or debuted in the previous year. It is the only national award that specifically recognizes public art projects. The 2013 Year in Review awardees were chosen from more than 350 submissions from across the United States.

To learn more about Orit Haj and other projects of the L.A. County Arts Commission Civic Art Program, visit lacountyarts.org.